New Books in Military History

Isabelle Held, "Atomic Bombshells: How Plastics Shaped Postwar Bodies" (Duke UP, 2026)

Apr 3, 2026
Isabelle Held, historian of bodies, design, and gender, explores how plastics like nylon, silicone, and foams migrated from wartime labs into women’s clothing and bodies. She traces military origins, fashion and medical crossovers, and the cultural language that shaped bombshell aesthetics. The conversation highlights material histories, legal gaps, and surprising archival links between industry, surgery, and performance culture.
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INSIGHT

Bullet Bra Connects Plastics To Postwar Bodies

  • The bullet bra links military-era plastics to postwar beauty: its conical shape became a widespread fashion across races, classes, and genders.
  • Isabelle Held traced the bra from 1930s design study origins to mass popularity and cultural afterlives like Madonna's corsets.
INSIGHT

Nylon Originated As Corporate Rebranding Project

  • Nylon was developed by DuPont as a peacetime reinvention away from explosives and marketed as the first fully synthetic fiber.
  • At 1939 World's Fair DuPont used 'Miss Chemistry' attendants wearing nylons so visitors could touch the material and link chemistry to improved bodies.
INSIGHT

Nylon Marketing Framed Women As Science Projects

  • Public fascination with nylon produced cultural framing that treated women's bodies as sites of 'improvement' by science.
  • DuPont's fair shows and the 'Test Tube Girl' reports reveal how nylon's marketing slid from fabric to feminized scientific rhetoric.
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